In the early days of their relationship, "they were completely devoted to each other," said Robert Zelnick, a communications professor at Boston University and author of the biography "Gore: A Political Life. In the early days, they could not bear being apart. Witness his service in Vietnam, when she could barely come to grips with his absence," he said.
I don't mean to imply that. I mean that I think people need to work it out," he said. Currently the couple live in Tennessee. The couple met in high school, at a party after the senior prom, and they married at the National Cathedral in Washington on May 19, But I am truly puzzled, with the rest of America, on why a couple who seemed so together is now splitting after 40 years.
Because I respect and admire couples who have made it beyond their silver anniversary. Now they are safe to buy that double burial lot because, like or not, they are sticking together. In a recent interview for the Associated Press , Stevenson explained that marriages are more likely to fail in the first 10 years, but after those years the divorce rate pretty much stays the same.
So a couple who celebrates 50 years is just as at risk as, say, Eric and I who have been together Natalie Low, Ph. She argues that our expectations are too high. And the new inconvenient truth is that sometimes the only way to preserve that is to leave. Joseph Communications uses cookies for personalization, to customize its online advertisements, and for other purposes. Learn more or change your cookie preferences. By continuing to use our service, you agree to our use of cookies.
He narrowly lost out to George W Bush, of course, but one of the abiding memories of the campaign was "that kiss" at the National Democratic Convention, a lingering passionate embrace that left commentators cynical and smitten in equal measure. With their four kids and conventional looks, they were the quintessential American family. They were a striking contrast to the Clintons who, at the time of Gore's run for presidency, were mired in marital problems.
Webb says that Tipper helped to soften her husband's public reputation for being stiff and, at times, pompous. Her role was largely to connect with the Bible Belt of Middle America, who viewed them as a traditional southern family. In , the Gores jointly authored a booked called Joined at the Heart: The Transformation of the American Family, in which they included anecdotes from their own marriage to help investigate the causes of these pressures.
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